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Monday, 18 May 2015

MWAKWERE CLEARED BY EACC

NAIROBI, Kenya, May 17 – No corruption charges will
be preferred against Kenya’s Ambassador to Tanzania Chirau Ali Mwakwere
after the Director of Public Prosecutions Keriako Tobiko found that
there is insufficient evidence against him to sustain prosecution.
Mwakwere has been under investigation by the EACC on suspicion of
involvement in the irregular acquisition of Kenya Railways Corporation
houses when he was Transport Minister in Mwai Kibaki’s government.
Charges he denied when he appeared before the commission for questioning.
“I have never ever committed such crimes… I have never sold or rented
a Kenya Railway house; if anything they should be grateful that I took
care of the asset as the Minister for Transport,” he defended himself.
At the time he also took issue with the way the matter was handled;
his inclusion in the infamous #ListOfShame by the EACC and which was
later made public before the accusations levelled against him were
properly investigated.
“It hurts because you’re presumed innocent until proven guilty. In
this instance, I was pronounced guilty before even being asked for my
side of the story,” he said.
Tobiko who says he received the EACC file on Mwakwere on Friday has
denied receiving any files on the suspended Cabinet Secretaries and
Principal Secretaries under investigation for graft.
This is contrary to earlier reports that the EACC had recommended to
the DPP the prosecution of three of the five suspended Cabinet
Secretaries.
The EACC has less than two weeks left to meet the 60 day deadline
President Uhuru Kenyatta gave for it to complete its investigations into
public servants accused of corruption.
The DPP has however already endorsed its recommendation for the
prosecution of Nandi Hills MP Alfred Keter and his nominated counterpart
Sunjeev Birdi who were included in the #ListOfShame for demanding that
the law be broken in their favour at the Gilgil weighbridge.
READ: MPs Keter and Birdi in court to block arrest, prosecution